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Friday, March 1, 2013

Who was Harold von Braunhut?

Who in their Right Mind Could Think of Fish Food as Pets? None other than the guy who invented X-ray Spex! A man by the name of Harold von Braunhut. This man saw a great, instant pet that could teach children around the world the oddities of nature. Harold decided to market Sea-Monkeys in 1957.


Harold Nathan Braunhut (31 March 1926 - 28 November 2003), also known as Harold von Braunhut, was an American mail-order marketer and inventor, most famous as the creator and seller of both the Amazing Sea-Monkeys and the X-Ray Spex. His grandfather, Tobias Cohn, had the patent for the pail and shovel and was head of the T.Cohn Toy Company until the early 1940s.

Braunhut was born in Memphis, Tennessee on 31 March 1926. He grew up in New York City and resided there until the 1980s, when he moved to Maryland.

Braunhut used comic book advertisements to sell an assortment of quirky products. He held 195 patents for various products, many of which have become cultural icons, including:

  1. X-Ray Spex - whose advertisements claim that the wearer can see through clothing and flesh. The product has appealed to generations of curious adolescent boys.

  2. Amazing Live Sea-Monkeys® - which are tiny brine shrimp that come to life when water was added. Sales took an upswing when comic book illustrator Joe Orlando drew comic book ads showing the humanized Sea-Monkeys enjoying life in their underwater fantasy world. Billions of the tiny creatures have been sold over the years and have generated fan websites, a television series, and a video game. Astronaut John Glenn took 400 million "Amazing Sea-Monkeys" into space with him in 1998.

  3. Crazy Crabs - which were simply hermit crabs

Braunhut also raced motorcycles under the name "The Green Hornet", and managed a showman whose act consisted of diving 40 feet (12 m) into a children's wading pool filled with only 1 foot (0.30 m) of water. Braunhut also set up a wildlife conservation area in Maryland.

Harold von Braunhut died on 28 November 2003 at his home in Indian Head, Maryland, following an accidental fall.

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